(1) This table is based on NIPA table 1.1.5 in the Survey of Current Business, Bureau of Economic Analysis (www.bea.gov).
(2) Component of personal outlays, found on table F.101, line 4.
(3) Structures, equipment, and intellectual property products.
(4) Government inventory investment is included in consumption expenditures.

(1) This table corresponds to NIPA table 1.12 in the Survey of Current Business, Bureau of Economic Analysis (www.bea.gov).
(2) The relationship of National Income to Gross Domestic Product is shown on NIPA table 1.7.5 in the Survey of Current Business, Bureau of Economic Analysis.

(1) This table is based on NIPA table 5.1 in the Survey of Current Business, Bureau of Economic Analysis (www.bea.gov). It is consistent with the Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts of the
United States jointly compiled by the Federal Reserve Board and the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
(2) Consists of net capital transfers shown on table F.9 and the acquisition of nonproduced nonfinancial assets (net) shown on table F.6.
(3) Differs from net lending or net borrowing (capital account) in the Integrated Macroeconomic Accounts of the United States by the statistical discrepancy (line 52).

(1) This table is based on NIPA table 5.11 in the Survey of Current Business, Bureau of Economic Analysis (www.bea.gov).
(2) Sum of lines 53, 55, 56, and 57 equals the negative of line 12. Series treated as capital losses rather than as capital transfers in the Financial Accounts of the United States.

(1) Consolidated statement for households and nonprofit organizations and nonfinancial noncorporate business.
(2) Directly held and those in closed-end and exchange-traded funds. Other equities are included in mutual fund shares (line 13), life insurance reserves (line 14), and pension entitlements (line 15).
(3) Line 17 less line 23.
(4) Table F.9, line 59 plus line 63.
(5) Railroad Retirement Board, the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, and federal government life insurance reserves.
(6) Line 45 and 46 are conceptually equivalent but measure saving using different data.
Line 45 is net acquisition of financial assets net of government insurance and pension fund reserves (line 1 less line 43) and
including contributions for government social insurance to U.S.-affiliated areas, plus net investment in nonfinancial assets net of consumer durables (line 27 less line 42) less net increase in liabilities (line 33)
plus net capital transfers paid (line 40). Personal savings, NIPA concept (NIPA) (line 46) is disposable personal income (line 48) less personal outlays (table F.101, line 4).

(1) Combined statement for households and nonprofit organizations and nonfinancial noncorporate business.
(2) Directly held and those in closed-end and exchange-traded funds. Other equities are included in mutual fund shares (line 13), life insurance reserves (line 14), and pension entitlements (line 15).

(1) Sector includes domestic hedge funds, private equity funds, and personal trusts.
Supplementary tables (tables F.101.a and L.101.a) show estimates of annual flows and year-end
outstandings of nonprofit organizations.
(2) See table F.10 for derivation of alternative measures of personal saving.
(3) Railroad Retirement Board, the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, and federal government life insurance reserves.
(4) Table F.9, line 63.
(5) Syndicated loans to nonfinancial corporate business by nonprofits and domestic hedge funds.
(6) Directly held and those in closed-end and exchange-traded funds. Other equities are included in mutual fund shares (line 34) and life insurance reserves (line 36), and pension entitlements (line 37).
(7) Includes public and private defined benefit and defined contribution pension plans and annuities, including those in IRAs, at life insurance companies. Excludes social security.
(8) Includes loans made under home equity lines of credit and home equity loans secured by junior liens, shown on table F.218, line 24.
(9) Includes loans extended by the Federal Reserve to financial institutions such as domestic hedge funds through the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF), shown on table F.109, line 21.

(1) Sum of the federal government (table F.106) and state and local governments (table F.107) sectors.
(2) Railroad Retirement Board, the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, and federal government life insurance reserves.
Saving transferred to the households and nonprofit organizations sector.
Includes value of Treasury and agency- and GSE-backed securities held by state and local government employee retirement funds.
(3) Table F.9, line 60 less line 12.
(4) Excludes Treasury securities held by state and local governments (line 33) and federal government loans to state and local governments (line 55).

(1) Railroad Retirement Board, the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, and federal government life insurance reserves.
(2) Table F.9, line 61 less line 12.
(3) Includes loans originated by the Department of Education under the Federal Direct Loan Program, as well as Federal Family Education Loan Program loans that
the government purchased from depository institutions and finance companies.
(4) Corporate equities purchased from financial businesses under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and from GSEs at issuance price.
(5) Nonmarketable government securities held by the civil service retirement and disability fund, Railroad Retirement Board, judicial retirement fund, military retirement fund,
and foreign service retirement and disability fund.
(6) Time and savings deposits (line 29) plus checkable deposits and currency at the monetary authority and U.S.-chartered depository institutions sectors (table F.204, lines 3 and 8).

(1) Data for state and local government employee retirement funds are shown in table F.120.
(2) Table F.9, line 62.
(3) Debt with original maturity of 13 months or less.
(4) Included in miscellaneous liabilities.

(1) U.S.-chartered depository institutions (F.111), foreign banking offices (F.112), banks in U.S.-affiliated areas (F.113), and credit unions (F.114).
(2) Net capital transfers paid from table F.9, line 54.
(3) Receivables from operating leases, such as consumer automobile leases, are booked as current income when payments are received and are not included in financial assets (or household liabilities).
The leased automobile is a nonfinancial asset; depreciation flows are included in line 1, and fixed investment flows are included in line 2.
F.111 U.S.-Chartered Depository Institutions
Billions of dollars; quarterly figures are seasonally adjusted annual rates

(1) Net capital transfers paid from table F.9, line 54.
(2) Receivables from operating leases, such as consumer automobile leases, are booked as current income when payments are received and are not included in financial assets (or household liabilities).
The leased automobile is a nonfinancial asset; depreciation flows are included in line 1, and fixed investment flows are included in line 2.
F.112 Foreign Banking Offices in U.S. (1)
Billions of dollars; quarterly figures are seasonally adjusted annual rates

(1) Additional detail on the financial assets and liabilities held in life insurer’s general and separate accounts is available on tables F.116.g and F.116.s.
(2) Annuity reserves held by life insurance companies, excluding unallocated contracts held by pension funds, which are shown on line 33.
(3) Includes reserves for accident and health policies, policy dividend accumulation, and contract claims.

(1) Private pension funds, state and local government employee retirement funds, and federal government employee retirement funds defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans.
(2) Includes claims on sponsor (i.e., unfunded pension entitlements).
(3) Assets of pension plans held at life insurance companies; series begins 1985:Q4.
(4) Nonmarketable government securities held by the civil service retirement and disability fund, Railroad Retirement Board, judicial retirement fund, military retirement fund,
and foreign service retirement and disability fund.
(5) Unfunded defined benefit pension entitlements.
(6) Actuarial value of accrued pension entitlements in defined benefit plans and assets of defined contribution plans. These liabilities are assets of the household sector.
(7) Households’ retirement assets in tax-deferred accounts, including employer sponsored pension plans, IRAs, Roth IRAs, and annuities.
(8) IRA assets are not included above. See memo item on table F.226 for a sectoral distribution of IRA accounts.
(9) Annuities held in IRAs at life insurance companies are excluded. They are included in line 26.

(1) Federal Home Loan Banks, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Farmer Mac, Farm Credit System, the Financing Corporation, and the Resolution Funding Corporation. The Student Loan Marketing
Association (Sallie Mae) was included until it was fully privatized in 2004:Q4. Beginning 2010:Q1, almost all Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage pools (table F.125) are consolidated on
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s balance sheets.
(2) Consolidated trusts refers to the unpaid balance of securitized mortgages Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac moved on to their balance sheets at the beginning of 2010 in response to new accounting rules.
(3) Sallie Mae student loans.
(4) Such issues are classified as agency- and GSE-backed securities.

(1) GNMA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Farmer Mac, and Farmers Home Administration pools.
Beginning 2010:Q1, almost all Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage pools are consolidated on
Fannie Mae’s and Freddie Mac’s balance sheets (table F.124). Also includes agency- and GSE-backed mortgage pool securities that are used as collateral for agency- and GSE-backed CMOs
and privately issued CMOs. Excludes Federal Financing Bank holdings of pool securities, which are included with federal government mortgages and other loans.
(2) Such issues are classified as agency- and GSE-backed securities.

(1) Agency- and GSE-backed mortgage pool securities backing privately issued CMOs.
(2) Mortgages backing privately issued pool securities and privately issued CMOs.
(3) Net issuance less net acquisition of corporate bonds held as assets.
(4) Receivables from operating leases, such as consumer automobile leases, are booked as current income when payments are received and are not included in financial assets (or household liabilities).
The leased automobile is a nonfinancial asset; depreciation flows are included in line 1, and fixed investment flows are included in line 2.
(5) Included in table F.128.

(1) Funding subsidiaries, custodial accounts for reinvested collateral of securities lending operations, Federal Reserve lending facilities, and funds associated with
the Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP).
(2) Common stock of American International Assurance Company Ltd. (AIA) and American Life Insurance Company (ALICO), two life insurance subsidiaries of AIG.
(3) Loans extended by the Federal Reserve to Maiden Lane LLC, Maiden Lane II LLC, Maiden Lane III LLC, Commercial Paper Funding Facility LLC, and American International Group (AIG).
(4) Loans extended by the federal government to the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) LLC and to funds associated with PPIP.
(5) Preferred shares issued by AIG to the federal goverment under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) program and the monetary authority sector’s preferred interest in
AIA Aurora LLC and ALICO Holdings LLC.

(1) Includes federal government liability to IMF for special drawing rights (SDRs) allocations and accrued interest.
(2) By international accounting standards, transactions in monetary gold are recorded in the financial account of the domestic sectors as increases (decreases) in assets,
and the counterparts are recorded as decreases (increases) in assets of the rest of the world.

(1) Sum of lines 25 and 28 less line 31 plus line 34.
(2) Interbank transactions between U.S. banks should net to zero and thus are not shown in lines 1 through 12 above.
However, the unallocated amount (line 44), which is due to inconsistencies
in source data, appears on line 13 as the discrepancy between liabilities and assets.
(3) Sum of lines 40, 41, 42, and 44.

(1) Detailed data on federal funds and security repurchase agreements are only available beginning 2012:Q1 for U.S.-chartered despository institutions, 2003:Q1 for foreign banking offices in U.S.,
2010:Q4 for credit unions, and 2000:Q1 for FHLB.
(2) Excludes term federal funds.
(3) Includes term federal funds.
(4) Reverse repurchase agreements (RRPs) conducted as part of the Federal Reserve’s Overnight RRP Operational Exercise (beginning 2013:Q3) and term RRP operations (beginning 2014:Q4).
(5) Included in line 2.
(6) Included in line 32.
(7) Includes banks (consolidated), government-sponsored enterprises, and primary dealers.

(1)
Agency- and GSE-backed securities include: issues of federal budget agencies (line 2) such as those for the TVA; issues of government-sponsored enterprises (line 3) such as Fannie Mae and FHLB;
and agency- and GSE-backed mortgage pool securities issued by GNMA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Farmers Home Administration (line 4). Only the budget agency issues are considered
officially to be part of the total borrowing of the federal government, which is shown in table F.209, line 43.

(1) Net issuance less net acquisition of corporate bonds held as assets.
(2) Net purchases of foreign issues by U.S. residents.
(3) For some sectors, purchases of MBS and other ABS are shown separately. MBS and other ABS include privately issued mortgage-backed securities and other privately
issued asset-backed bonds.
(4) Net purchases of U.S. issues by foreign residents.

(1) Excludes depository institution lending in the form of open market paper, mortgages, consumer credit, and security credit which are shown on other instrument tables.
(2) Loans from Federal Reserve banks to households, rest of the world, broker and dealers, and funding corporations. See loan details on table F.109.

(1) The Student Loan Marketing Association (Sallie Mae) was included until it was fully privatized in 2004:Q4.
(2) Syndicated loans from domestic entities, excluding depository institutions and finance companies which are included elsewhere.

(1) Mortgages on 1-4 family properties including mortgages on farm houses.
(2) Charge-offs are excluded from the flow (line 1) and are accounted for as other changes in volume. Quarterly figures are shown at an unadjusted quarterly rate. Data begin 2007:Q1.
(3) Loans made under home equity lines of credit and home equity loans secured by junior liens.
Excludes home equity loans held by individuals. Home equity loans
held by U.S.-chartered depository institutions exclude charge-offs.

(1) Student loans originated under the Federal Family Education Loan Program.
(2) Includes loans originated by the Department of Education under the Federal Direct Loan Program and Perkins Loans, as well as Federal Family Education Loan Program
loans that the government purchased from depository institutions, finance companies, and nonprofit and educational institutions, and loans in default.
(3) Revolving credit that also includes overdraft plans on checking accounts and other loans without a fixed repayment schedule.
(4) Includes student loans held by nonprofit organizations (line 3), the federal government (line 6), depository institutions (part of lines 7 and 8), and
finance companies (part of line 11). Data begin in 2006:Q1.
(5) Includes student loans before 2006:Q1.

(1) Annuities, including those in IRAs.
(2) Includes unallocated insurance company contracts beginning 1985:Q4.
(3) Includes the Thrift Savings Plan, the National Railroad Retirement Investment Trust, and other federal government retirement funds.
(4) Excludes all individual retirement accounts (IRAs), except those at life insurance companies.
(5) Assets of the household sector (F.101).
Figures for depositories (lines 8 and 9) include Keogh accounts. Variable annuities in IRAs are included in the life insurance sector (line 10)
and excluded from the money market mutual fund and mutual fund sectors (lines 11 and 12).

(1) Direct investment is valued on a current-cost basis.
Excludes capital gains and losses. Components of direct investment--equity, reinvested earnings, intercompany accounts-are
not available before 1982.
(2) Funds invested by financial institutions such as domestic hedge funds through the Public-Private Investment Program (PPIP).